Is it Ham or is it Bacon?

traceyjj

Senior Member
Whats all the fuss about bacon? (AND I am being serious :) )

Sausage I'll eat, pork steak, pork roast, pulled pork I'll willingly eat, but bacon... nope, I dont even like the smell of it cooking.
 

Lawrence

Senior Member
Whats all the fuss about bacon? (AND I am being serious :) )

Sausage I'll eat, pork steak, pork roast, pulled pork I'll willingly eat, but bacon... nope, I dont even like the smell of it cooking.

You must be one in a million (To the rest of the GUYS on here: She'll probably love that. ;)) I don't think I have ever met someone who doesn't like the smell of bacon.
I even have a vegetarian friend who says it is the one smell of cooking meat that makes his mouth water.
 

mauckcg

Senior Member
Tonight is the local fairs animal auction. Let's see if I can get a pig this year. The one i bought at auction last year was delicious.
 

aroy

Senior Member
I made both Ham and Bacon at home.

Ham is from the hind leg. You salt and spice it for at least a couple of weeks. I keep it in the fridge as the temperature here is rarely below 20 degrees centigrade. After curing, it is smoked to partially cook it. I just keep it for a few hours in our oven at minimum temperature. In cold countries you just smoke for a few days it and then hang it to cure through the winter. The meat is ready to eat.

Bacon is either belly or the shoulder, depends where you are from. You just cure it in salt & spices - same as ham and smoke it lightly. The meat is still uncooked and needs cooking. I like bacon with a lot of salt, so that when eggs are fried in bacon fat (after the bacon, of course), no salt is needed.

These are traditional recipes. What is done at industrial scale is different.
. Meat is injected with salt solution, so there is a lot of water in it. To impart the "smokey" taste, "Liquid Smoke" is added.
. After a day, the meat is cured.
. Excess water is drained and the meat is sliced and packed.
If the leg was used it is ham. If the belly or shoulder was used it is bacon!
 

montignac

Senior Member
Ham with eggs is usually served cold but bacon is grilled or fried and served hot. Bacon tends to come as two forms either streaky or back bacon and both can be bought in the UK cured in the following formats
Dry Cured
Salt cured
Smoked
 

nikonpup

Senior Member
donuts with bacon sprinkles was the thing here for awhile, tried it once. A blt and i am good to go. Costco imo has good bacon without paying $$$$.
 

wreckdiver1321

Senior Member
After having traveled in Europe, I am now much more fond of English style bacon than I am the American stuff. Similar flavor but more meaty. Like a cross between bacon and Canadian bacon. I like putting it on a bun with some HP Sauce (I have completely lost the Americans now...).

That being said, I also drink black tea everyday, can cook fish and chips and shepherds pie from scratch, and I once owned a beautiful Land Rover Discovery with a union jack spare tire cover. My favorite TV shows are Doctor Who and TopGear. I use words like "bugger" on a daily basis. I can tell a Yorkshire accent from a Welsh accent. Hell, I can tell a South London accent from a North London accent.

I am a closet Englishman.
 

jazzjunkie

Senior Member
I no longer eat bacon, but when i did, american bacon was terrible.... all hard and thin and greasy.... thickly cut, grilled Danish bacon with HP sauce was the sunday breakfast of choice..

now it all smells like an electrical fire when cooking, yuk.
 

aroy

Senior Member
I'm a fabulous cook, just not of stinky bacon :cool:

Try making Bacon at home, and you will revise your opinion. Most of the bacon sold today is mass produced stuff full of water and artificial flavour.

Just clean the belly/shoulder piece, coat it with salt, pepper and a bit of sugar. Let it cure in either a plastic packet or a container. If is warmer than 10 degrees centigrade, cure it in a refrigerator. After a couple of weeks check if it has shriveled and released a lot of water. If so it is done. Now you can either smoke it, or just keep it in a warm oven for a few hours (ideal 60 degrees, but upto 120 will do). Your bacon is ready. Slice it, fry it and revel in the aroma and taste of your home made bacon.

For those who are interested here are step by stem images (taken with cell phone) of making Ham. I do not have those for bacon, but most of the steps are same.

Ham01.jpg
Raw HAM - Thigh

Ham02.jpg
Deboned

Ham03.jpg
Squared

Ham04.jpg
Dry Spices

Ham05.jpg
Ground Spices, salt, garlic, ginger

Ham07.jpg
My brass mortar

Ham08.jpg
Liquid smoke

Ham09.jpg
Meat mixed with spices and but in a bag

Ham10.jpg
Tied tight, so that no liquid spills out

Ham11.jpg
After cure

Ham12.jpg
I put the ham in a container to give it a round shape

Ham13.jpg
Fully in, with a lid of one size smaller container

Ham14.jpg
Lid on

Ham15.jpg
Static press to compress and shape the ham

Ham16.jpg
Into the oven

Ham17.jpg
After cooking at extremely low temperature for 4 hours

Ham18.jpg
This is what all the trouble was for
 

Lawrence

Senior Member
Try making Bacon at home, and you will revise your opinion. Most of the bacon sold today is mass produced stuff full of water and artificial flavour.

Just clean the belly/shoulder piece, coat it with salt, pepper and a bit of sugar. Let it cure in either a plastic packet or a container. If is warmer than 10 degrees centigrade, cure it in a refrigerator. After a couple of weeks check if it has shriveled and released a lot of water. If so it is done. Now you can either smoke it, or just keep it in a warm oven for a few hours (ideal 60 degrees, but upto 120 will do). Your bacon is ready. Slice it, fry it and revel in the aroma and taste of your home made bacon.

For those who are interested here are step by stem images (taken with cell phone) of making Ham. I do not have those for bacon, but most of the steps are same.

View attachment 110229
Raw HAM - Thigh

View attachment 110231
Deboned

View attachment 110232
Squared

View attachment 110233
Dry Spices

View attachment 110234
Ground Spices, salt, garlic, ginger

View attachment 110235
My brass mortar

View attachment 110236
Liquid smoke

View attachment 110237
Meat mixed with spices and but in a bag

View attachment 110238
Tied tight, so that no liquid spills out

View attachment 110239
After cure

View attachment 110240
I put the ham in a container to give it a round shape

View attachment 110241
Fully in, with a lid of one size smaller container

View attachment 110242
Lid on

View attachment 110243
Static press to compress and shape the ham

View attachment 110244
Into the oven

View attachment 110245
After cooking at extremely low temperature for 4 hours

View attachment 110228
This is what all the trouble was for

Absolutely brilliant and fascinating - thanks for sharing.
Any chance of what spices exactly you use?
 

aroy

Senior Member
Ham04.jpg
Dry spices clockwise - Black pepper, cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, mace
Dry grind them by hand. Using a food processor will spoil the aroma due to heat generated

Ham05.jpg
Rest, Clockwise - Salt, ginger paste, ground dry spices, garlic paste
 

aroy

Senior Member
This thread seems to have died out. So here is what I made for breakfast

I normally buy a big slab of Bacon, and then slice it to the thickness that is appropriate at that time - thin if you want it crisp, thick if you want to feel the meat.

ESC_1962.jpg
In the frying pan

ESC_1963.jpg
with flash

ESC_1965.jpg
without flash, looks more appetizing
 

wreckdiver1321

Senior Member
I like the lighting more with the flash. Could it be the bacon dried out while you were setting up the flash? A common trick with food photographers is to spritz a little bit of oil on the food to keep it shiny.

Sent from my XT1080 using Tapatalk
 

aroy

Senior Member
Well, I was just in a hurry to start the break fast. I will try to get a better shot technically next time, but no jazzing up the food just for the shot.
 

Lawrence

Senior Member
This thread seems to have died out. So here is what I made for breakfast

I normally buy a big slab of Bacon, and then slice it to the thickness that is appropriate at that time - thin if you want it crisp, thick if you want to feel the meat.
I have lived in Rhodesia, South Africa and New Zealand - all countries that are big meat consumers and have never found bacon available as a "big slab". I would be interested to hear what you mean and maybe see a photo of the whole chunk.
 

aroy

Senior Member
I have lived in Rhodesia, South Africa and New Zealand - all countries that are big meat consumers and have never found bacon available as a "big slab". I would be interested to hear what you mean and maybe see a photo of the whole chunk.
Here in India, you can get a "Slab" of bacon. It is either the full length of a pork belly or a full length of a pork shoulder, that has been processed into bacon. The shop will slice it to your required thickness or you have the option of buying a big chunk. My favourite shop sell the shoulder slab which is around 5kg for the whole piece.
 
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